PCPOWERPLAY

NVIDIA AND OBS WANT YOU TO SAY BYE TO DUAL-PC LIVESTREAM­ING

New GPU-based solution makes showing the world your l33t skills easier.

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Livestream­ing is easier than ever, but it can still be hard on a PC. Many streamers use dual-PC setups in which one system is used to actually play a game and the other to stream it. But this week Nvidia announced that a new version of OBS, the software underpinni­ng many livestream­ing setups, is optimised to let people who use Nvidia GPUs host quality streams from a single PC.

The optimisati­on arrives via improved support for the NVENC hardware encoder used by Nvidia’s GPUs. Most streamers use GPUpowered encoding rather than relying on their CPUs because that allows them to use their graphics cards to their full potential instead of being bottleneck­ed by their processor. That can be taxing on the GPU, though, leading to lower in-game frame rates.

According to Nvidia, OBS Studio version 23 “reduces the FPS impact of streaming by up to 66 percent compared to the previous version.” That ostensibly means that streamers no longer have to choose between lowering the quality of their streams, dealing with low in-game frame rates, or investing in a dual-PC setup. These optimisati­ons affect 600-series and newer GPUs with NVENC.

Of course, the company also used the opportunit­y to highlight the advantages its RTX graphics cards can offer streamers (we wonder why.) Nvidia claimed using its latest-and-greatest offerings “will noticeably improve image quality at reduced bitrates,” thanks to “architectu­ral improvemen­ts to the dedicated hardware encoder.” That should help streamers with less-than-stellar internet speeds.

Aside from the above comparison, Nvidia said the new optimisati­ons improved framerates by up to 48 percent in Fortnite, PlayerUnkn­own’s Battlegrou­nds, Call of Duty: Black Ops 4 — Blackout and Apex Legends compared to x264 Fast encoding (the focus on battle royale titles likely resulting from the genre’s massive popularity on every major streaming platform).

OBS Studio version 23 is available now for Windows, macOS, and Linux at this website. Nvidia said StreamLabs, a popular streaming platform that uses OBS as a base for its own app, “will implement these improvemen­ts in their client in the near future.” Hopefully that will help save smaller streamers from the hassle of buying and using a dual-PC setup just to improve their stream’s quality.

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